New acquisition:
Fluke 325 true RMS clamp meter
Up to 400A AC and DC
https://www.fluke.com/en-us/product/electrical-testing/clamp-meters/fluke-325It cost me USD215 (free shipping in the USA, Ebay adds sales tax):
https://www.ebay.com/itm/154515341850 - no relation to the seller. It was packaged well, delivered quickly, and appeared completely new and unused (including the vinyl screen protector). It came with the Chinese-language 2D barcode sticker on the front, like in the ad. Clearly the seller has found himself a nice arbitrage opportunity. I tested all of the functions and it works flawlessly. The readings are dead nuts on. It came with an illustrated quick-reference card that shows all regular usage, "secret" boot-up buttons, and also the specifications (in English).
The 325 has several tricks that the 323 and 324 can't match: frequency via clamp, an extra 40kR range, and (most importantly) DC current via clamp. The supplied test leads are a step down in quality vs the ones that come with Fluke's fancier multimeters, but are significantly better than the tat that you'll find the usual scumbags flogging. Also included is the regulation Fluke K-type thermocouple. It uses a single tiny white LED for a light on the right side of the display. This is an adequate solution, but only just. I imagine that they were trying to hit certain overall dimensions, which limited them to a few small batteries, which gave them a small power budget, that chased the rat that ate the cheese, that lay in the house that Jack built. And now the backlight sucks. See how that works?
I bought this meter to help me gather startup and running loads from several circuits in order to size a backup generator for the nest. It came with a set of two "Energizer MAX" AAA batteries installed that I promptly removed. I'm going to see how well NiMHs work in it.
<rant subject="leaky alkaline batteries and other things that piss me off" tone="get off my lawn">
I've got a Garmin color-screen GPS with a PCB with corroded traces and an SD card that is corroded in place due to a pair of AA batteries that leaked, and a second set that leaked
I'm slow, but I eventually learn my lesson. Also, my love affair* with chlorinated brake cleaner has officially ended since it made the plastic of the battery door (of the same GPS) as brittle as a sheet of 1mm-thick ice. May the Great Duck bless the fine Ebay seller in Russia that sells new replacement Garmin plastics for just a few dollars apiece, replies to messages, and combines shipping.
</rant>
*
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/chat/brake-cleaner-is-cheap-and-cleans-pcbs-really-well/EDIT:
Added a family photo
EDIT EDIT:
I put in NiMHs and ran it for a while. It seems to like them just fine.